James River Writers

Writer Spotlight: Meet Char McCargo Bah

Char McCargo Bah is the CEO/Owner of FindingThingsforU. She is retired from the federal government as a Senior Policy Writer and Researcher and holds undergraduate degrees in Urban Studies and African-American Studies. In addition, Char holds professional certificates in Genealogy, Publishing, Investigation, Research, and Paralegal Studies. She has been a genealogist since 1982, appearing in numerous television interviews and documentaries.

Char’s most recent book  Alexandria’s Freedmen’s Cemetery: A Legacy of Freedom was published in 2019. Prior to that, Char’s work also reflected her expertise in genealogy and research, with the publication of  African Americans of Alexandria, VA: Beacons of Light in the Twentieth Century in 2013 and the short story Everyday Grace, Everyday Miracle: Living the Life You Were Born to Live in 2006. She is a freelance writer on local history for her column “The Other Alexandria,” in the Alexandria Times.

JRW: When did you first realize you wanted to be a researcher and writer?

CMB: I realized when I was a teenager that I enjoyed reading biographies and memoirs. I would go to the library to research additional information on the biographies that I was reading. Later on, as a young adult, while I was in college, I changed my major to Urban Studies and African-American Studies and excelled in those majors. My research skills really took off. In addition, I fell in love with genealogy. I studied genealogy for ten years before I started taking on clients. Now it has been forty years of researching and writing. Throughout my life journey from my teenage years, college years, and now as a mature woman, I still love reading, writing, and researching families.

JRW: What subject are you most passionate about writing?

CMB: I am passionate about family matters. I would say that the subject would be stories centered around families, whether they are nonfiction or fiction stories.

JRW: What is one of the most surprising things you learned while publishing your work?

CMB: The most surprising thing about my publishing experience is that I did it. A sense of accomplishment. All of my years of studying the craft, strengthening my skills, and researching paid off when I published my first and second books.

JRW: What advice would you offer new writers?

CMB: A famous author gave me advice in the 1980s that was true then, as it is true today. She said, “Study your craft. Read, write, and study the art of writing.”

Exit mobile version